Claude-Joseph Vernet (Avignon 1714-1789 Paris)
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Claude-Joseph Vernet (Avignon 1714-1789 Paris)

Le Vaisseau submergé

Details
Claude-Joseph Vernet (Avignon 1714-1789 Paris)
Le Vaisseau submergé
oil on canvas
37½ x 51¼ in. (95.3 x 130.2 cm.)
Provenance
Jean Charpentier, Paris.
Anon. Sale, Paris, 7 January 1914, lot 12.
with Carnavalet, Paris, from whom acquired by the present owner circa 1950.
Literature
F. Ingersoll-Smouse, Joseph Vernet, Paris, 1926, II, p. 18, no. 900, fig. 226, as signed.
Engraved
Leveau, 1774 (in reverse).
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

Born in Avignon, Vernet went to Rome at the age of twenty to become a history painter. He soon took to landscape painting after discovering the art of Claude Gellée, Salvator Rosa and Andrea Locatelli, and decided to join the studio of Adrien Manglard, a successful French marine painter. He travelled to Naples in 1737 and on many other occasions. By 1740, Vernet had established a reputation as a painter of marines, and French diplomats as well as English Grand tourists were to be among Vernet's most consistent patrons, the latter no doubt encouraged by Vernet's English wife, Virginia Cecilia Parker, the daughter of a captain in the papal navy, whom he married in 1745.
Official recognition in his own country began when he was approved by the Académie Royale in Paris in 1746, which enabled him to exhibit at the Salon that year for the first time. When Abel-François Poisson de Vandières, later marquis de Marigny and Directeur des Bâtiments, made his educational tour of Italy in 1750, he and his party visited Vernet's studio in Rome. It was on the marquis' initiative that, in 1753, Vernet was summoned back to France to paint the Ports de Francs, one of the most important royal commissions of King Louis XV's reign. He continued working on this commission until 1765.

Leveau's 1774 engraving (fig. 1) dates the present picture to 1769, after Vernet had settled in Paris. The theme of a shipwreck on the Mediterranean coast is quite common in Vernet's oeuvre; less usual is the intense pinkish-red with which the artist lights up the evening sky and that is reflected in the cliffside and blowing foliage and catches the crests of the waves, heightening the drama of the scene depicted.

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